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Does all light have heat?
An uneducated guess ~Then its impossible to have cold light. So the pile up of energy [which causes the heat?] could be the reason for the supposed weight ~ just an idea, but could it be expanding the apparatus?So a single busrt of energy would do nothing, but with a pile up it would be enough to create a change in the surrounding air itself?Of course I have no idea what I'm talking about
does it?
But the only other type of mass is relativistic Mass but that isn't really Mass in the correct sense of the word so therefore a photon has 0 Mass
So --- what you seem to be asking is if you gather enough energy to a given region of spacetime (or some part of the vacuum perhaps?) - does this effect the surrounding spacetime (instead of air?), because if this where the case, then is sounds a bit like general relativity where matter [and] displace space and time through causing distortions.
Quote from: Mr. Scientist on 21/09/2009 02:29:17So --- what you seem to be asking is if you gather enough energy to a given region of spacetime (or some part of the vacuum perhaps?) - does this effect the surrounding spacetime (instead of air?), because if this where the case, then is sounds a bit like general relativity where matter [and] displace space and time through causing distortions.I don't think light/heat could affect space... What would you describe space to be? If space is the absence of an element does it mean its considered 'dead'? [But it can't be an absence because if elmeents can pass through it, then it has to be composed of atoms itself right?] I think before looking into the weight of light, maybe space itself needs to be understood. Actually would space have energy or is it completely dead? Too much to consider!I don't think its possible to weigh light on earth because there would be the constant pressure of something!And if we gave light a mass ~ we would more than likely feel it and its destructive path, I think the fact that its massless gives it the ability to move at the so called speed of light.But I think that light would just be causing a chemical reaction to all surrounding atoms by giving them a 'light' .. or is light just a perception given by our eyes and no actual reaction occurs to anything?I wouldn't have a clue regardless, haha. I think I went too far off tangent.
I would of thought that heat is an energy in its own form, since energy would be radiation in essence ~ so when a subject recieves energy, the result would be heat.Because heat isn't a solid tangable thing (you can't hold it), it passes through the atoms as a wave ~ and a wave would be an energy.So in space, energy can't possibly affect anything because there is no solidity there at all? I would of thought the space would be a gas ~ and some gas can be heated up.Other wise, is there no heat at all, and heat is only a reaction caused by our ozone layer?So does the energy from the sun is just pure energy, the ozone layer transforms this energy and gives it heat or something, then we feel its effects.I think I should stop soon, I really do not have a clue what I am talking about hahaha
So there is no possibility of weighing energy then?
So there is no possibility of weighing energy then? What I don't understand is how come not all energy can pass through solid mass.
So there is no possibility of weighing energy then? What I don't understand is how come not all energy can pass through solid mass.You can pass radio waves through, but not sunlight? The heat will slowly crawl to the other side but it can't pass through. So is there only 1 type of energy, or are there variations?Then is there ANY energy that could be weighed? Wouldn't that be another contradiction? I thought if something were to be massless, then it wouldn't have difficulties going through solids.
Lightarrow is partially true as when you are inviting massless radiation, we must invoke gamma into the equation. This reduces its mass to zero, but is intrinsically-related to its energy-momentum which is inexorably non-zero.
Quote from: Mr. Scientist on 23/09/2009 23:12:42Lightarrow is partially true as when you are inviting massless radiation, we must invoke gamma into the equation. This reduces its mass to zero, but is intrinsically-related to its energy-momentum which is inexorably non-zero. No, maybe you haven't understood very well what I wrote. I was talking about proper = invariant mass, not about 4-momentum.
Quote from: lightarrow on 24/09/2009 15:23:51Quote from: Mr. Scientist on 23/09/2009 23:12:42Lightarrow is partially true as when you are inviting massless radiation, we must invoke gamma into the equation. This reduces its mass to zero, but is intrinsically-related to its energy-momentum which is inexorably non-zero. No, maybe you haven't understood very well what I wrote. I was talking about proper = invariant mass, not about 4-momentum.Making that distinction does make a difference. Invariant, or rest mass is always associated to something which has inertial mass - photons though, may have a finite inertia. Question is, should we allow the photon to have an inertia, or should that be reserved only for material bodies?
Quote from: Mr. Scientist on 24/09/2009 16:19:11Quote from: lightarrow on 24/09/2009 15:23:51Quote from: Mr. Scientist on 23/09/2009 23:12:42Lightarrow is partially true as when you are inviting massless radiation, we must invoke gamma into the equation. This reduces its mass to zero, but is intrinsically-related to its energy-momentum which is inexorably non-zero. No, maybe you haven't understood very well what I wrote. I was talking about proper = invariant mass, not about 4-momentum.Making that distinction does make a difference. Invariant, or rest mass is always associated to something which has inertial mass - photons though, may have a finite inertia. Question is, should we allow the photon to have an inertia, or should that be reserved only for material bodies?This is a different concept. Inertia is possessed even from objects which don't have invariant mass (photons).